The Role Of Masculinity

1288 Words3 Pages

While the social construction of femininity has been widely examined, the dominant role of masculinity until recently, has remained largely invisible. To construct a reasonable for or against argument that will outline whether masculinity is in crisis or not, I will apply relevant media theories along with ideas from influencing figures to create a constructive argument. The questions that arise that either support or argue with the statements that key theorists propose will be answered formatively and critically. Furthermore, analysis of the representation of gender and masculinity within modern media forms, along with the rise and formation of the ‘laddish’ culture and what factors have influenced the creations of lad mags; while outlining …show more content…

Further, another step is to connect the element of values and social critiques to the analysis of masculinity and how scientific generalization creates the interests and desires associated with the male gender. Knowledge of what stereotypes associated with masculinity have been shaped by many practices; indefinitely linked to media ‘natural science itself has a gendered character. Western science and technology are culturally masculinized’ (Connell, 1995:7), the social position of dominant men in a gendered world question whether masculinity is within a person and has not been defined by the society they have lived in. The drive for scientific generalization of men being the dominant species may be justice as to why masculinity stereotypes were formatted that way because of the link to their …show more content…

The models of masculinity ‘generated powerful anxieties regarding male identity’ (history.ac.uk, 2016). Further studies have found that most identities shown within messages written to loved ones, compared to fellow servicemen, show the constructions of different identities the men created compared to different narrative forms. ‘Expression of these identities was affected by the audience being addressed’ in order to cast a persona the people they are writing to wants. The persona these men took on enabled them to mask their fear and anxieties during war time and could showcase their bravery through a written medium; questionably it could be linked to the rise of the masculine crisis and how personal barriers were built to showcase an ideology of what the world wanted you to be; compared to how the men really felt. The influence of the male model of manliness and the ideas society wanted men to conform to, compared to those who did not showcase their pain and suffering, were praised ‘the complex and the overworked neurasthenic officer was much closer to an acceptable, even heroic male ideal’ (History.ac.uk, 2016). These men were the heroes in the eyes of the society due to showcasing their strength during a time of despair. Recognizing a time of heightened male dominance only 50 years ago, it showcases that masculinity and

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